Technical Field
[0001] The invention is concerned with devices including a substrate-supported optical
waveguide.
Background of the Invention
[0002] Originating, for practical purposes, with the development of inexpensive, low-loss
optical fiber waveguides, optical communications technology has become well-established
especially in long-distance, "inter-exchange" communications. More recently, interest
has been growing in bringing optical signals closer to their ultimate destination
such as, e.g., individual subscriber telephones, facsimile terminals, and data-processing
equipment. In a primary field of application, namely the so-called local loop, it
is desired to bring single-mode optical signals to the subscriber. And, in so-called
local-area networks (LAN), multi-mode signals are being used in communications over
relatively short distances such as, e.g., internal to a building or plant.
[0003] While, in long-distance communications, the cost of the fiber transmission medium
is determinative of commercial feasibility, the total cost of local applications is
dominated by the cost of components such as, e.g., optical sources, detectors, connectors,
and couplers. Thus, the commercial feasibility of optical communications in local
situations depends largely on the availability of low-cost optical components and
on inexpensive ways of connecting components to optical fibers. Considered as particularly
desirable in this respect are inexpensive means for connecting optical fibers and
other optical components to substrate-supported waveguides, proper alignment of a
component relative to the waveguide being a primary concern in such connections. For
earlier work in this field see, e.g.,
L.P. Boivin, "Thin-Film Laser-to-Fiber Coupler",
Applied Optics, Vol. 13 (1974), pp. 391-395:
H.P. Hsu et al., "Optical Fibers and Channel Waveguides",
Electronics Letters, Vol. 12 (1976), pp. 404-405; and
J.T. Boyd et al., "Optical Coupling from Fibers to Channel Waveguides Formed on Silicon",
Applied Optics, Vol. 17 (1978), pp. 895-898.
Summary of the Invention
[0004] The invention is a device in which at least one optical component (such as, e.g.,
an optical fiber or a photodetector diode) is in preferred alignment with a substrate-supported
waveguide, such alignment being defined as axial, collinear, facing, perpendicular,
or in terms of any other suitable specification of relative position. Preferred, in
accordance with the invention, are essentially single-crystal substrates amenable
to crystallographically preferential etching; particularly convenient is the use of
a silicon substrate. Alignment is facilitated by a preferentially etched groove such
as, typically, a V-groove.
[0005] In the case of an optical fiber connection, such groove undercuts a waveguide so
as to permit butt coupling of a fiber against a ledge or lip which overhangs a sloping
etched surface. (Butt coupling is understood as being across a fiber-waveguide distance
not exceeding fiber mode diameter, such diameter being approximately equal to fiber
core diameter).
Brief Description of the Drawing
[0006]
FIG. 1 is a schematic top view of an optical coupler as a preferred embodiment of
the invention and as including four instances of a fiber aligned with a thin-film
waveguide;
FIG. 2 is a schematic cross-sectional view of the coupler of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a schematic end view of one of the four fiber connections to the coupler
of FIG. 1;
FIG. 4 is a schematic top view of the fiber connection of FIG. 3;
FIG. 5 is a schematic cross-sectional view of the connection of FIG. 3, the cross
section being perpendicular to the substrate and perpendicular also to the cross section
of FIG. 2;
FIG. 6 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a detector device as a preferred embodiment
of the invention, optical coupling being from a thin-film waveguide to a photodetector
diode;
FIG. 7 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a detector device representing a preferred
embodiment alternative to the embodiment of FIG. 5;
FIG. 8 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a device of the invention as included
in a molded package;
FIG. 9 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a device of the invention as included
in a ceramic package; and
FIG. 10 is a schematic cross-sectional view of a device of the invention as included
in a silicon package.
Detailed Description
[0007] The following description is in terms of a preferred embodiment in which a thin-film
waveguide is supported by a silicon substrate, a layer of silicon dioxide serving
as an optical cladding between the waveguide proper and the silicon substrate, and
a layer of deposited silicon dioxide completing the cladding structure. Manufacture
of such preferred structure is facilitated by processing involving layer deposition
and patterning as disclosed in further detail in a patent application designated as
C.H. Henry - R.A. Levy 8-12, "Device Including a Substrate-supported Optical Waveguide,
and Device Manufacture".
[0008] FIG. 1 shows silica-covered silicon substrate 11, thin-film waveguides 12 and 13
disposed on the substrate and beneath the silica cover layer, and optical fibers 14,
15, 16, and 17 aligned with waveguides 12 and 13 as placed in etched V-grooves in
the substrate.
[0009] FIG. 2 shows silicon substrate 11, silicon dioxide layer 21, waveguides 12 and 13,
and silica cover layer 22. Layers 21 and 22 serve as optical cladding layers. The
material of the higher-index waveguide material may be phosphosilicate glass. For
optical radiation at a wavelength of 1.3 micrometer, preferred dimensions are as follows:
A thickness of approximately 10 to 15 micrometers for silicon dioxide layer 21, a
width of approximately 5 micrometers for the waveguides 12 and 13, center-to-center
spacing of approximately 7 to 8 micrometers between waveguides 12 and 13 (this in
the interest of effective evanescent-field coupling between side-by-side waveguides
12 and 13), and a thickness of approximately 5 micrometers for cover layer 22.
[0010] FIG. 3 shows silicon substrate 11 with V-groove 31, silicon dioxide layer 12, waveguide
12, and silica cover layer 22. As indicated by a broken circular line, and as more
explicitly depicted in FIG. 5, fiber 14 is positioned such that the fiber core portion
is aligned with waveguide 12.
[0011] Etching of grooves involves, first, etching straight through the glass-layer waveguide
structure, and then, by anisotropic etching, forming of a V-groove in the silicon
substrate. Conveniently, etching through the glass layer structure is by means of
reactive ion etching in the presence of a chromium mask layer which subsequently also
serves as mask layer during preferential etching, e.g., by means of a potassium hydroxide
solution.
[0012] Fastening of an optical fiber in a V-groove preferably involves glass-to-glass or
metal-to-metal contact, the latter being preferred for fiber attachment by soldering,
e.g., between chromium-coated fiber and V-groove surfaces. Alternatively, index-matching
epoxy or silicon rubber can be used for fastening of the fiber in a V-groove. Another
concern in connection with glass fiber touching V-groove sidewalls is with fiber strength,
and fiber surface roughening by so-called orange-peel etching may be used to advantage
in this respect.
[0013] FIG. 4 and 5 illustrate preferred fiber-to-waveguide coupling in accordance with
the invention, such coupling being facilitated by a ledge overhanging a sloping end
surface of an etched groove, thereby overcoming a difficulty noted in the paper by
L.P. Boivin as cited above. Specifically, FIG. 4 shows silica-covered silicon substrate
11 with V-groove 31, waveguide 12 beneath the silica cover, and the position of optical
fiber 14. Specifically shown is a ledge 41 as formed by undercut etching of silicon
while the waveguide structure is left intact.
[0014] FIG. 5 shows silicon substrate 11, silicon dioxide layer 21, waveguide 12, cover
layer 22, and fiber 14 with core portion 141 and cladding portion 142. The ledge portion
41 is as described above with respect to FIG. 4. Though not shown, use of an index-matching
substance in a gap between the fiber and the waveguide is not precluded.
[0015] While, in FIG. 4 and 5, fiber 14 is shown as having a face which is essentially perpendicular
to the fiber axis, a fiber may alternatively terminate in a taper, further facilitating
butt coupling. Preferably, however, at least the core portion of the fiber terminates
in a surface essentially perpendicular to the fiber axis. In either case, alignment
in accordance with the invention does not require consideration of the azimuth of
a fiber in fiber placement as is the case, e.g., where butting depends on an angled
fiber face. (Azimuthal freedom of the invention may be used to advantage, e.g., in
the preferred placement of a polarization-preserving fiber.)
[0016] FIG. 6 shows substrate 11 with groove 31, waveguide structure 64 including a waveguide
between cladding layers, metallization layer 23, and photodetector diode 61 with contact
metallization layers 611 and 612, and light-sensitive region 613. The photodetector
diode 61 is shown resting against a sidewall of groove 31 whose location, depth, and
length are chosen so as to provide positive, passive alignment of region 613 with
light emanating from waveguide 12. Metallization layers 23 and 611 are connected by
solder 62, and a so-called flying-wire bond 63 connects contact layers 24 and 612.
Broken lines show the light path.
[0017] FIG. 7 shows the same features as FIG. 6, adapted for positioning of the photodetector
diode against the opposite sidewall of the groove. While, in the arrangement of FIG.
6, photodetector diode 61 is butt coupled to the waveguide structure 64, FIG. 7 illustrates
optical coupling across a significant distance. In both cases, and unlike axial fiber-waveguide
alignment, alignment is facilitated by an etched groove oriented with a significant
component perpendicular to the waveguide direction.
[0018] FIG. 8 shows silicon substrate 11, waveguide structure 81 on substrate 11, optical
fibers 14 and 15, silicone rubber 82, and molded encapsulation 83.
[0019] FIG. 9 shows silicon substrate 11, waveguide structure 81 on substrate 11, optical
fibers 14 and 15, silicone rubber 82, airspace 91, ceramic encapsulation 92, and glass
seals 93 between encapsulation 92 and optical fibers 14 and 15.
[0020] FIG. 10 shows silicon substrate 11, waveguide structure 81 on substrate 11, optical
fibers 14 and 15, fastening blocks 101 and 102, and silicon lid 103.
[0021] While described above in terms of a preferred embodiment based on silicon technology,
the invention includes embodiments as based on other substrate materials such as,
e.g., Group III-V and Group II-VI semiconductor materials for which anisotropically
acting etchants are available. Preferred substrates are single-crystal or essentially
single-crystal in the sense that crystallographic dislocations and other imperfectionns
may be tolerated so long as they do not interfere with the production of a desired
groove by preferential etching. While, for the sake of aligning fibers in V-grooves,
substrate orientation is preferably (100), other substrate orientations are not precluded.
For example, (110) orientation results in preferential etching of grooves having vertical
walls as may be preferred for the aligned placement of photodetectors and light sources.
1. A device comprising an optical waveguide on an essentially single-crystal substrate,
and an optical fiber axially aligned with said waveguide,
alignment being as resulting upon placement of said optical fiber in a preferentially
etched groove in said substrate,
CHARACTERIZED IN THAT said groove undercuts said waveguide for a distance which is
sufficient to permit optical butt coupling between said waveguide and said fiber,
butt coupling being defined as resulting either in physical contact between said waveguide
and said fiber or in a distance between said waveguide and said fiber which is less
than a mode diameter of said fiber.
2. The device of claim 1, said optical fiber terminating in a surface which, at least
across a core region of said fiber, is essentially perpendicular to the fiber axis.
3. The device of claim 2, said fiber terminating in a taper.
4. The device of claim 1 in which said substrate is a (100)-silicon substrate.
5. The device of claim 1 in which said groove is a V-groove.
6. A device comprising an optical waveguide on an essentially single-crystal substrate,
and an optical component aligned with said waveguide in optical coupling relationship,
alignment being as resulting upon placement of said optical component in a preferentially
etched groove in said substrate,
CHARACTERIZED IN THAT the orientation of said groove has a significant component perpendicular
to the direction of light propagation in said optical waveguide.
7. The device of claim 6, said component being a light detector.
8. The device of claim 6, said groove being a V-groove.
9. The device of claim 6, said groove being a vertical groove.
10. The device of claim 6, said component being in butt-coupling relationship with said
waveguide.
11. The device of claim 6, optical coupling between said waveguide and said component
being across a significant distance.